A Reformed theologian’s interpretation of Aristotle’s ethics. Peter Martyr Vermigli was a scriptural exegete, but also an Aristotelian philosopher. His voluminous commentaries on Old and New Testament books are complemented by this volume, the only one of its kind in his corpus. Peter Martyr Library Vol. 9.

Peter Martyr Vermigli’s earliest biblical commentary to survive is his lectures on the Book of Lamentations. The Introduction gives a précis of Christian Hebraism and pays particular attention to the Bomberg Bible. The notes highlight Martyr’s allusions to the Jewish commentators of that Bible. Edited and translated by Dan Shute. Peter Martyr Library Vol. 6.

In this last work of Vermigli's distinguished career as a theologian, he uses a dialogue to discuss the disagreement among Christians about the Eucharist and Christ's presence in the Lord's Supper. Edited and translated by John Patrick Donnelly. Peter Martyr Library Vol. 2.

This volume illustrates the busy and conflicted career of Vermigli, who left his beloved Italy in 1542, one step ahead of the Inquisition, to spend twenty years in three centers of Reform: Strasbourg, Oxford, and Zurich. Edited and translated by John Patrick Donnelly. Peter Martyr Library Vol. 5

Among the most polemical of Martyr’s works, the texts presented here are part of the turbulent period in England during the times of Edward VI and Archbishop Cranmer. Edited and translated by Joseph C. McLelland. Peter Martyr Library Vol. 7.

Edited and translated by Joseph C. McLelland, includes commentaries with sections on reason and revelation, body and soul, knowledge of God, providence, miracles, and responsibility, and on freewill and predestination.

Predestination and justification are two of the most distinctive and familiar doctrines associated with the Protestant Reformation. Translated and edited by Frank James III. Peter Martyr Library Vol. 8.